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The Elusive Maestro Why the process of finding a new conductor makes music lovers weep.

BSO, Boston, listen to classical music radio onlineThe Elusive Maestro
Why the process of finding a new conductor makes music lovers weep.
By Jan Swafford
Posted Tuesday, April 12, 2011, at 11:20 AM ET

When the Boston Symphony announced in 2001 that James Levine would be taking over the orchestra in 2004, there was a mighty outpouring of "hmmmm" from the Boston musical public. Levine was good, no question, but he was mainly an opera conductor, churning it out at the Met night after night. And he planned on keeping his job in New York. On the other hand, at least Boston's long musical doldrum under Seiji Ozawa was nearing its end after three decades of music-making more forgettable than otherwise. The stories of Levine and Ozawa form a parable of orchestras and their maestros, a parable about to be rehearsed again.

When Levine finally mounted the podium in Symphony Hall for his debut as music director, Boston discovered that he was so bulbous and physically messed up that he sat hunched over with one cheek planted awkwardly on a stool, only occasionally looked up from the score, and barely moved his arms. Yet from his debut with the epic Mahler Eighth, Levine proceeded to give performances that were not just superb; they were sometimes staggering.

Levine performed more contemporary music than any Boston conductor since Serge Koussevitsky. He got away with it because he was so damn good. And he was old-fashioned good, unsullied by trends — such as the early-music virus that infects conductors with the delusion that faster is always better. His tempos, like every part of his conceptions, were a particular response to a particular score. His Beethoven and Sibelius were as coherent and distinctive as his Schoenberg and Harbison. He was unpretentious and boyishly enthusiastic, known to all as "Jimmy."

Clearly the orchestra understood that with Levine they could show they were one of the greatest bands in the world, and they rose to the opportunity. Unforgettable evenings accumulated: a full-throated and magnificent German Requiem, a ferocious Varèse Amériques, a two-year series pairing Beethoven and Schoenberg. Levine's program note for the Beethoven Missa Solemnis began, "This is the greatest piece ever written! I mean it!" He made us believe it. Before long it dawned on us that the Boston Symphony was entering its most glorious period since the Koussevitzky era — and Levine might be a better conductor than Koussevitzky. You got used to emerging from Symphony Hall with your head buzzing, ecstatic.

Then pffffft.

On March 2, the BSO announced that Levine's season was over and, likewise, his seven-year tenure as music director, effective in September but in practice immediately. At age 67, after three years of falling apart from chronic back trouble and other physical problems, with management trying to nudge him toward the exit so the orchestra could get on with its life, one more back collapse finished it. Levine had been profligate with his health for a long time, partly due to his killing schedule between the Met and the BSO. Now his lifestyle caught up with him. The Boston Symphony, having spent the three years of his decline in limbo, now entered some circle of hell where rudderless orchestras drift in despair.

For years to come it's going to be guest conductors, with an occasional Levine appearance if he's up to it. Can guests give good performances? Sure. But guest conductors equal to the BSO are a rare and endangered species. Most of the young maestros have orchestras and crowded schedules of their own. In practice the best guests tend to be semi-retired, like the incomparable long-time visitor Bernard Haitink, or like Sir Colin Davis, Christophe von Dohnányi, and Lorin Maazel. All those men are in their 80s. More importantly, guest conductors can't shape an orchestra week by week, season by season, into an ensemble of some 70 people with a personality, a point of view, an almost clairvoyant communication among players and conductor that can approach the level of a string quartet's.

Meanwhile the conductor search is on. Call it prospecting for the perfect mate or Saturday-night date. He or she doesn't exist, but some people are much, much better than others. There's looks and talent and experience, but there's also chemistry, and those don't always happen together. For an orchestra, there's also the bottom line, which says that you want somebody holding the baton who's as magnetic as possible, to put the butts in the seats. When you make a mistake you have to live with it for years, if not decades. The pitfalls and pratfalls of the search process are illustrated by the case of Seiji Ozawa.

In 1973, Ozawa arrived at Boston in a wave of enthusiasm. He was Mister Cool Maestro. He wore swinging love beads. He was a graceful, commanding lion on the podium. He had been mentored at Tanglewood, had studied with Herbert von Karajan in Berlin, and had enjoyed successful tenures with the Toronto and San Francisco Symphonies and well-received guest appearances with the BSO. He took over with the expectation that he'd bring new vision and vigor to an orchestra that had never been less than first-rate but that had never recovered its leading position and general pizazz since Koussevitzky retired in 1949 after a 25-year tenure that climaxed with the creation of the Tanglewood festival. Yes, Ozawa's a little lightweight, experts said, and his English is sketchy, but with this orchestra to work with, he'll ripen and mature soon enough, and he'll build the audience.

Ozawa did sell seats. As a hero in his homeland, he attracted to the orchestra millions in Japanese money. But he never did ripen all that much, just as his English remained sketchy. Now and then he gave a standout performance, usually in the full-throated late-Romantic and 20th-century literature, but most of the time what came out was glittering surfaces with nothing substantial beneath: no discernable concept, no vision. Nor did he bring any vital leadership to Tanglewood. For the 29 years of Ozawa's tenure, music and vision languished in Boston.

And there you have the existential uncertainties involved in a conductor search. You don't really know what you've got till the person arrives and unpacks the trunk. Think the Red Sox, looking for a pitcher and deciding Dice-K was the messiah. Turns out, dice was the word for him.

Ozawa announced his departure three years before the date, so the orchestra had plenty of time to mount a search. Levine's exit was a shaky house of cards that collapsed all at once. From this point, simply naming a conductor will take two years or more, then a year or more before the chosen one can take the throne. Here's a survey of that intricate and amorphous process. It's like a roadmap where there are no roads.

Orchestra manager Mark Volpe says the BSO will form a search committee made up of four players elected by the orchestra, four members of the orchestra board, plus himself and the BSO artistic administrator. Orchestra board members are wealthy enthusiasts and patrons, volunteers not usually trained in music. Since the late 19th century, when Boston Brahmin Henry Lee Higginson created the Boston Symphony and ran it as his own little fiefdom, the history of orchestras has partly been a matter of conductors and musicians chipping away at the power of boards, so far with middling success.

The opinion of the players counts now, but the board still holds the power because they are the legal fiduciaries. If a music director does something outrageous or alienates the orchestra or plays too much music not enough people like, the board fires his backside. Boards have ousted conductors like Mahler, in New York, to Stokowski, in Philadelphia (the latter at the peak of his popularity, because he insisted on playing the Schoenberg violin concerto). When looking for a conductor, boards traditionally go for the more glamorous candidates, because boards tend to know more about money than music.

Among the first things the BSO search committee has to do is fill out the roster of guest conductors for the next couple of years. At the same time they have to decide on the job description for the coming music director. In that description, the artistic issue always comes first, but after that come many, many other issues relating to Tanglewood, fundraising, external commitments, community, age, health, availability, gender, chemistry, and so on, more or less endlessly. On the line are jobs, reputations, organizations, and millions of dollars.

Over the coming seasons the guest conductors will be a mix of maestros known and new to the orchestra. Every player in the orchestra fills out a grade form for every guest. Players are highly picky, but when a conductor gives the downbeat they know the real thing when they see it. (Except when they're wrong.) Since anybody who is anybody is scheduled years ahead, it will probably take at least two years for the orchestra to see all persons of interest. Meanwhile, among the guest conductors in the next year or two, who is a real contestant in the beauty contest and who is not, says manager Volpe, is "fluid." In other words, they're not saying. From this stage until the end, the cards will be played very, very close, and speculation will fester month after month.

At last, the search committee "recommends" a name. The full orchestra board, with its own agenda, makes the decision. But if the final decision is not to the orchestra's liking, there will be big, public trouble. A case in point: When Marin Alsop became the first woman to be named conductor of a major U.S. orchestra, much of the musical world cheered, but the Baltimore Symphony virtually revolted against the board that hired her. Whether that had to do with Alsop's gender or her chops was the question, though of course the orchestra claimed the latter. That Alsop would keep her job was a foregone conclusion in any case. Under no circumstances could Baltimore jettison a historic female conductor before she took the podium. Everybody had to suck it up and hope for the best. Alsop is still at the helm in Baltimore and doing well, thank you very much, with a contract to 2015.

The conductor's artistic skills come first, the mantra goes, then everything else. But everything else looms hugely. In the BSO's case, health and age will be issues, surely, more than ever. Levine was not the first conductor to falter at the helm. In the late '60s, the orchestra got burned badly in hiring the aged and ailing William Steinberg. For four years he was indisposed much of the time, replaced by a brilliant but very green assistant conductor, Michael Tilson Thomas, age 24. The orchestra was furious, but there was nothing to be done until Seiji Ozawa took over in what might be called a rebound relationship. (The official BSO history on the website does not mention Tilson Thomas at all.)

With the BSO now, hot tickets the press has speculated on include, of all people, Michael Tilson Thomas (doing wonders in San Francisco, recently returned for a stint at Tanglewood after many years away, so perhaps forgiven by the orchestra); Robert Spano (started his rise as a BSO assistant, has led Brooklyn and Atlanta, teaches conducting at Tanglewood); Riccardo Chailly (superstar who has a contract with the Leipzig Gewandhaus till 2015 and has never conducted the BSO); and Mariss Jansons (late 60s, a heart condition, currently with the Concertgebouw in Holland).

Then there are the wild cards. Not all great or potentially great conductors are international superstars, and those are the ones you'd love to uncover. One name put forth is the Russian Vasily Petrenko, who now conducts the Liverpool Phil and is 34. Wouldn't you know, he just signed a contract with Oslo that begins in 2013. Oslo to Boston is some commute. Of course, there's Venezuelan Gustavo Dudamel, aka "the Dude," who took over L.A. in 2009. He's the closest thing out there to a young Lenny Bernsteinian rock star. But Dudamel is 30 years old and only in the majors for about five years, and he ain't gonna happen with Boston. The orchestra would erect barricades.

Naturally, the above are already music directors of important orchestras, with obligations stretching years ahead. That was the situation with Levine and the Met. He insisted on maintaining both jobs, which did his health and the BSO no good at all. With any major conductor who can be tempted away from a booked-up gig, it will take years to extract him from the old position and have him fully committed to Boston. Like Levine, some of them may want to sustain dual, if not dueling, podiums. That is not what the orchestra needs, but they might have to put up with it. It's safe to say that this time the BSO will hope for younger and healthier candidates who show promise of settling in Boston. All that coming after artistic matters, in theory, of course.

And that's what it's like with orchestras and conductors. To summarize, for those who care about the Boston Symphony and the state of classical music in the United States: Just shoot us. Levine had his last rehearsals with the BSO on the Mahler Ninth, which he noted is "a work of farewell." At its end, that symphony, like Levine's career, dies and dies and dies. He collapsed before the performances.

Somehow, someday, the moment will come when the new guy (almost certainly a guy) will step onto the podium and a couple of thousand people sitting in the darkness will hope to be thrilled, and many of them will remember Levine and the Mahler Eighth and the German Requiem and other golden nights, a brief golden age bookended between hmmmm and pffffft, and that audience and thousands of others will feel hope again. Until then we've got a row of pretty faces week after week, and maybe some splendid three-night stands.


Jan Swafford is a composer and writer. His books include Johannes Brahms: A Biography and Charles Ives: A Life With Music.

© 2010 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2291008/

 
Physics strikes the right note with classical musicians

Contact: Michael Bishop
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Institute of Physics
Physics strikes the right note with classical musicians

The combination of physics and music might usually prompt images of Brian Cox playing keyboards for D:Ream, but a new trio, consisting of a professor of physics, an internationally renowned composer and an award-winning violinist, are bringing particle physics to life through a series of classical compositions.

An insight into their work, aptly named "Particle Partitas", is revealed in an exclusive video report on physicsworld.com [http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/multimedia/47845], where the trio show the creative processes at work and tentatively attempt to play a few bars for the first time.

Jack Liebeck, a Classical BRIT award winner, and Brian Foster, a particle physicist at the University of Oxford, are no strangers to the fusion of physics and music: for the last six years they have been touring a self-created "musical lecture" that explores Einstein's legacy to physics.

Their newly recruited composer, Edward Cowie, is also aware of the crossover between the two disciplines, having originally studied physics at Imperial College London.

"The music is shaped by the activity of particle physics. In terms of the way subatomic particles are observable in their collisions, in their traces, in their impacts, music can do the same thing. You can make music that has a device into which it is forced to impact – fragments fly off it and they have behaviours, which can parallel," explains Cowie in the video.

This new series of 20 short musical pieces, documenting the history of particle physics from the late 19th century through to the present day, will be accompanied by short lectures on the topic given by Foster. It will debut in the UK in June 2012 and Foster also hopes to take the show abroad to particle physicists at CERN.

Article first appeared in Physics Week.

 
SONOMA STATE UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES GRAND OPENING OF GREEN MUSIC CENTER

SONOMA STATE UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES GRAND OPENING OF GREEN MUSIC CENTER ON SEPTEMBER 29 AND 30, 2012

 

INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED PIANIST LANG LANG OPENS WEILL HALL IN OPENING NIGHT RECITAL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2012

 

SANTA ROSA SYMPHONY AND MUSIC DIRECTOR BRUNO FERRANDIS PRESENT INAUGURAL CONCERT ON SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30

 

SONOMA STATE UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES MULTI-YEAR CONCERT AGREEMENT

WITH SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY

AND EDUCATIONAL PARTNERSHIP OPPORTUNITIES WITH CARNEGIE HALL

 

Sonoma County, California – January 2, 2012 - The Donald and Maureen Green Music Center and the Joan and Sanford I. Weill Hall, Lawn, and Commons on the campus of Sonoma State University officially open on Saturday, September 29, 2012 with a performance by internationally acclaimed pianist Lang Lang in Weill Hall followed by a formal opening night dinner.  The Santa Rosa Symphony, Resident Orchestra of the Green Music Center, will perform a Sunday matinee concert led by Music Director Bruno Ferrandis and featuring special appearances by former music directors Corrick Brown and Jeffrey Kahane in addition to a commissioned world premiere from a Sonoma County composer.  A full calendar of Opening Weekend events will be announced as part of the Inaugural Season Announcement in early March.

 

The San Francisco Symphony and Sonoma State University announce a multi-year multi-concert series in which the Orchestra performs four subscription concerts annually at the Green Music Center, beginning in the inaugural 2012-13 season.   Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas and guest conductors will lead the Orchestra at Weill Hall with full details of dates, artists, and repertoire to be announced March 5.

 

In addition, it was announced that talks are underway between Sonoma State University and New York’s Carnegie Hall, exploring a number of future partnership opportunities, including music education programs that could benefit students in area schools; special residencies with young professional musician fellows from The Academy program, combining performance and community activities; as well as programming in Sonoma County tied to future Carnegie Hall artistic initiatives.  Details of the partnership will be announced once plans are finalized.

 

The above news was announced on January 1, 2012 by Sonoma State University President Ruben Armiñana, Sanford I. Weill, Chair of the Green Music Center Board of the Advisors, and Donald Green, Chair Emeritus of the Green Music Center Board of Advisors at a New Year’s Day Open House for major donors and supporters from the community.  “This project has been a labor of love for Maureen and me and many in our community for more than 12 years,” stated Donald Green.  "We feel excited and grateful to everyone as we watch the Green Music Center come to fruition in such a positive way with so many supporters."

“This is truly the moment for which we have all been waiting,” said President Armiñana.   “We would not be here without the community of music lovers and philanthropists who have come together around our vision of a world class performing arts venue at a public university.”

 

Located on the picturesque Sonoma State University campus in the heart of California’s Sonoma wine region, the Green Music Center is a focal point for music in the region and home to the University’s music department.  The more than $130,000,000 performing arts center will welcome local music lovers and visitors from around the world providing economic and cultural benefits for the entire region.  In its public university setting, the Green Music Center offers a peerless venue with superb acoustics where students and guests of all ages and backgrounds can come to hear, work alongside, and learn from the very best.  The Green Music Center is an initiative led by Sonoma State University but supported through deep roots in the Northern California philanthropic community.  Beginning with the Green Family’s initial contribution, and supported by the Santa Rosa Symphony,  the dream behind the world class performing arts center has attracted contributions from more than 1,800 contributors.

 

“Joan and I are extremely passionate about education, music, and the arts and we are firm believers that they help bridge cultural divides that exist throughout the world,” said Sandy Weill.  “The Green Music Center at Sonoma State University brings all three together on the campus of a public university.  Not only will the Center create an innovative learning environment for students with our exciting new partnerships, but it will provide an economic boost to the area and help diversify its tourist base.  Northern California boasts some of the country’s best food, wine, weather, people and now culture.  Today’s announcements further enhance the reputation of San Francisco and the whole North Bay as one of the world’s premier cultural destinations.”

 

“The San Francisco Symphony looks forward to participating in the inaugural seasons of the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University,” said Brent Assink, Executive Director of the San Francisco Symphony.  “It is a beautiful venue and will, I believe, soon join the roster of America’s finest concert halls.  It will undoubtedly enrich the cultural life of the entire Bay Area.  We are eager to welcome audiences to this stunning new venue and share the inspired music-making that is the trademark of the vibrant partnership between the San Francisco Symphony and Michael Tilson Thomas.”

 

Lang Lang will be the first of many internationally acclaimed performing artists and ensembles featured in the first season in 2012-2013, programmed by Artistic Director Jeff Langley in partnership with Artistic Consultant Robert Cole.  Opportunities to hear the talented student musicians from Sonoma State University’s Music Department in performance throughout the year, a full slate of student led programming initiatives from On Campus Presents, and concerts with both the Santa Rosa Symphony and San Francisco Symphony combine to create a full season of music and arts in the 2012-2013 inaugural season.

 

Founded in 1928, the Santa Rosa Symphony ranks among the oldest symphony orchestras in the western states.  As Resident Orchestra, the Santa Rosa Symphony will present its classical music series in Weill Hall, inaugurate a new Family Concert Series and host free concerts for youth and youth orchestras as part of the 2012-2103 Inaugural Season at the Green Music Center.  “It is nothing less than a transformational opportunity that seldom is afforded any American orchestra – to call a world class concert hall its home," stated Santa Rosa Symphony Executive Director Alan Silow.  “Rivaling the Vienna Musikvereinssaal and Boston Symphony’s Ozawa Hall, the Weill Concert Hall will create an intimate space that becomes part of our musical ensemble itself.”

 

About The Green Music Center:  The initial concept for the Center began with Donald and Maureen Green’s dream to establish a choral recital hall on campus and expanded into a world-class arts center after Sonoma State University President Ruben Armiñana, his wife Marne Olson, and Donald and Maureen Green visited Tanglewood in the early 1990s.  These four love classical music and education, and saw the University as a future home for a music venue unmatched by any on the West Coast and beyond.  They were impressed by Ozawa’s acoustical perfection and intrigued by its design and they set out to closely replicate it on the Sonoma State campus.  Joan and Sanford I. Weill’s recent generous contribution enables Sonoma State University to complete the Center.  Weill Hall, Lawn, and Commons join an already completed state-of-the-art music education building, faculty offices, and an elegant restaurant and executive retreat center.  Among the plans was to provide a new home for the Santa Rosa Symphony. When finally complete the Green Music Center will also include the 250 seat "Schroeder’s Recital Hall," named by Jean Schulz, wife of the late cartoonist Charles Schulz.   Designed by architect William Rawn, working closely with acoustician Lawrence Kirkegaard, the 1,400 seat Joan and Sanford I. Weill Hall is modeled after Seiji Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood and was designed to replicate the intimacy and acoustics of Vienna’s Musikverein and Symphony Hall in Boston.  In addition to the concert hall, the Center will include two additional performance venues.  The south end of the Joan and Sanford I. Weill Hall is designed with a back wall that can be fully opened onto a beautifully landscaped and terraced lawn, similar to Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood, expanding the reach of the concert hall to an additional 3,000 guests.  The Weill Commons, an area directly to the east of the main concert hall, will be transformed into an amphitheater with a 10,000 seat capacity for large-scale outdoor events.

 

For further information, please visit http://gmc.sonoma.edu.

 

 

 

-30-

 

 

Media Contacts:  For further information or access to photographs, the media should

contact either Karen Ames Communications or Jessica Anderson:

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FIVE GRAMMY® AWARDS FOR ARTISTS, ENGINEERS AND PRODUCERS FOR NAXOS OF AMERICA

Artists and producers from Naxos and its distributed labels were honoured with five Grammy Awards at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards from Los Angeles.

Composer Robert Aldridge and librettist Herschel Garfein's opera Elmer Gantry won Best Contemporary Classical Composition. This Naxos recording with the Florentine Opera Chorus and Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra also won Best Engineered Album, Classical (Byeong-Joon Hwang & John Newton, engineers; Jesse Lewis, mastering engineer). The New York Times called Elmer Gantry "...an unabashedly populist piece. The music is kinetic, vividly scored and steeped in American vernacular idiom; the storytelling is urgent."

Naxos artists, percussionist Christopher Lamb and conductor Giancarlo Guerrero also won the Best Classical Instrumental Solo Grammy for their Naxos recording of Joseph Schwantner's Concerto for Percussion & Orchestra, with the Nashville Symphony conducted by Giancarlo Guerrero. Maestro Guerrero is now in his third season as Music Director of the Nashville Symphony. Since 1985 Christopher Lamb has been Principal Percussionist of the New York Philharmonic.

Steven Mackey, tenor Rinde Eckert and Eighth Blackbird won Best Small Ensemble Performance for their recording on the Cedille label of Lonely Motel - Music from Slide featuring music by Steven Mackey. Of his own composing Mackey wrote: “... the daily act of exploration and discovery is as important to me as the finished product. Of course, composing is no fun at all if you don’t love what you are creating.”

Producer Judith Sherman won Producer of the Year, Classical for six different recordings on Cedille (Capricho Latino, Notable Women, The Soviet Experience, Vol. 1, Winging It), Sono Luminus (85th Birthday Celebration, Claude Frank) and Innova (Speak!), all distributed by Naxos. Judith Sherman is a ten-time Grammy Award nominee, and is now a three-time winner.

Jim Selby, CEO of Naxos of America said: “My congratulations to the artists, engineers and producers involved in these projects. It is their dedication and creative genius that makes the music business so exciting and rewarding.”

--
Raymond Bisha
Naxos Director of Media Relations, North America

 
Jeremy Denk Returns to New York for Finale of American Mavericks U.S. Tour, March 26 & 30

Part of the San Francisco Symphony’s centennial celebration, American Mavericks kicked off on March 8 in San Francisco, where Denk performed works by Henry Cowell, including the composer’s Piano Concerto, which was recorded for release by the orchestra’s SFS Media label. Denk will also participate in a performance of Foss’s Echoi during the Ann Arbor stop on March 22.



Of his rendition of Cowell’s Piano Concerto on March 10 – the first time Denk ever performed the work – Richard Scheinin of the San José Mercury News wrote, “Denk joined the San Francisco Symphony and conductor Michael Tilson Thomas in a performance of Cowell's Piano Concerto that sizzled. It ought to put the piece on the map. At last… The pianist's climactic windmill passages—blurred, two-handed palmings, resounding once more like bells—capped a blockbuster performance.”



Denk’s first American Mavericks event in New York, on Monday, March 26 at 7pm, is the live video webcast on WQXR’s Q2 Music: An Evening of Music and Conversation with Michael Tilson Thomas. Hosted by Nadia Sirota and David Garland, the program of performances and conversation with Thomas and an array of musical guests will delve into the works of the revolutionary American composers that have inspired American Mavericks, including Charles Ives and the Pulitzer Prize–winning John Adams, who will also be participating in the video webcast. The event will be available to audiences everywhere as a live video webcast at http://wqxr.org/mttja/. More information is available at www.greenespace.org.



On Friday, March 30 at 8:30pm, Denk will perform Lukas Foss’s Echoi at Carnegie Hall as part of the final concert of the American Mavericks U.S. tour. The evening of chamber works in Zankel Hall explores the wide range of music that has defined the maverick spirit throughout the festival, and features groundbreaking, imaginative compositions by artists who have been fundamental to our nation’s current musical explorations. Written in 1963 and inspired by work the composer had done with the Improvisation Chamber Orchestra in Los Angeles, Echoi is a four-part piece using “controlled improvisation,” and it is now considered one of America’s premiere experimental chamber pieces. Three musicians from the San Francisco Symphony (percussionist Jack Van Geem, clarinetist Carey Bell, and cellist Peter Wyrick) will join Denk for the quartet. In addition to Echoi, the evening also includes works by Steve Reich, Meredith Monk, and Morton Subotnick, and welcomes additional guests including Meredith Monk & Vocal Ensemble and vocalist Joan La Barbara.



To fill out a week of music-making, Denk will spend his mornings (March 26–30) as a pianist-in-residence on Q2 Music’s Hammered!, the daily show “celebrating the breadth of keyboard music.” Also known for his curious mind and exceptional writing—he has received accolades for his blog, Think Denk and his February 6 New Yorker piece, “Flight of the Concord”, and he offers  lively commentary on NPR Music’s Deceptive Cadence blog during its Goldberg Week—Denk will offer listeners insight into his distinctive take on experimental and cutting-edge works for piano. Hammered! airs weekdays at 11am and repeats each evening at 11pm on WQXR’s Q2 Music.



Jeremy Denk at American Mavericks in New York



March 26, 7pm

New York, NY

Jerome L. Greene Performance Space / online at WQXR’s Q2 Music: http://wqxr.org/mttja/

An Evening of Music and Conversation with Michael Tilson Thomas

Hosted by Nadia Sirota and David Garland

With Michael Tilson Thomas, John Adams, St. Lawrence Quartet, and others



March 30, 8.30pm
New York, NY
Zankel Hall
American Mavericks
Members of the San Francisco Symphony



March 26–30, 11am (repeats at 11pm)

Pianist-in-residence

Q2 Music’s Hammered!



jeremydenk.net

Follow Jeremy Denk on Facebook

Follow Jeremy Denk’s blog

 
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